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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 17, 2022

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I appreciate your honesty about not having an example for Texas. I’m pretty sure the Northeast had some of the last minute changes, but can’t remember for sure.

Re: cheating, I don’t see how improving turnout can be considered cheating at all. In my mind the ideal election has 100% (real) turnout, and encouraging that is generally good. Allocating state resources holds some risk of impropriety, but just lowering the barrier to entry should be fine.

If that benefits one party...well, I’ll cite the Litany of Tarski.

I don’t see how improving turnout can be considered cheating at all. In my mind the ideal election has 100% (real) turnout, and encouraging that is generally good.

When I see people talking like this my "Goodhart's Law" detector starts going off. An election is many things besides just a numbers game. It is (1) a public ritual in which people are seen to be taking part in collective decisionmaking. (2) An actual decisionmaking process, through which the public provides answers to questions put to it. (3) Symbolic nosecounting among the different tribes; a peaceful proxy for warfare. (4) A process by which political outcomes are legitimated.

Achieving each of those goals does not necessarily require progress along the exact same axis, labeled "number of unique ballots cast."

Require, no. Benefit from, I think yes. Which of those goals is not served by higher participation?

  1. The public ritual only benefits.

  2. Decisionmaking depends on whether the additional voters are, well, smarter or dumber than the original ones. If your best and brightest were already voting, I don't see much benefit. There's a case where turnout consists of one benevolent philosopher-voter who is always wise. In the absence of such, I'm inclined to vaguely gesture at "wisdom of the crowds".

  3. The sublimation of violence clearly benefits as more potential rioters are included in the safe, sane, boring process.

  4. Giving everyone a "voice," however small, seems like a pretty well-established way to get the stamp of legitimacy. Mostly for reasons 1 and 3. The classic alternative is divine-right kingship. If we constrain our solutions to the axis where ballots are being cast, I don't see how that justification is available.

I appreciate your honesty about not having an example for Texas. I’m pretty sure the Northeast had some of the last minute changes, but can’t remember for sure.

Harris county(the same one discussed here) did institute drive thru voting at close to the last minute in 2020 and may or may not have been totally within the confines of what state law allows to do so. They certainly wouldn't be to do so again. And the state did actually try to throw out a batch of Harris county ballots over the issue, which the county sued over, and won.

Re: cheating, I don’t see how improving turnout can be considered cheating at all.

Speaking generally, but when it comes to juicing turnout selectively in areas highly likely to yield "helpful" votes, i.e. with questionably-legal drop boxes on university campuses and in extremely Democratic districts (and even at highly Democratic-aligned events) as was done in Wisconsin, it seems a lot harder to defend.